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AP World History: Unit 1 Flashcards

From Hunting and Gathering to Civilizations, 2.5 million-1000 B.C.E.: Origins

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15016758848Hunting and GatheringMeans of obtaining subsistence by humans before the mastery of sedentary agriculture; normally typical of tribal social organization0
15016758849NeolithicThe New Stone Age between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; period in which adaptation of sedentary agriculture occurred; domestication of plants and animals accomplished1
15016758850NomadsCattle- and sheep-herding societies normally found on the fringes of civilized societies; commonly referred to as "barbarian" by civilized societies2
15016758851CultureCombination of ideas, objects, and patterns of behavior that result from human social interaction3
15016758852Neolithic/Agricultural/Agrarian revolutionOccurred between 8000 and 5000 B.C.E.; transition from hunting and gathering to sedentary agriculture4
15016758853PastoralismA nomadic agricultural lifestyle based on herding domesticated animals; tended to produce independent people capable of challenging sedentary agricultural societies5
15016758854MesopotamiaLiterally "between the rivers"; the civilization that arose in the alluvial plain of the Tigris-Euphrates river valleys6
15016758855SumeriansPeople who migrated into Mesopotamia circa 4000 B.C.E.; created the first civilization within the region; organized area into city-states7
15016758856CuneiformA form of writing developed by the Sumerians using a wedge-shaped stylus and clay tablets8
15016758857City-stateA form of political organization typical of Mesopotamian civilization; consisted of agricultural hinterlands ruled by an urban-based king9
15016758858ZigguratsMassive towers usually associated with Mesopotamian temple connections10
15016758859Babylonian EmpireUnified all of Mesopotamia circa 1800 B.C.E.; collapsed due to foreign invasion circa 1600 B.C.E.11
15016758860HammurabiThe most important Babylonian ruler; responsible for codification of the law12
15016758861PharaohThe term used to denote the kings of ancient Egypt; considered a god as well as a political and military leader. The term, "great house" refers to the palace of the pharaohs13
15016758862PyramidsMonumental architecture typical of Old Kingdom Egypt; used as burial sites for pharaohs14
15016758863HieroglyphsForm of writing developed in ancient Egypt; more pictorial than Mesopotamian cuneiform15
15016758864MonotheismThe exclusive worship of one god; introduced by Jews into Middle Eastern civilization16
15016758865PhoeniciansSeafaring civilization located on the shores of the eastern Mediterranean; established colonies throughout the Mediterranean; extensive trade, communication networks, early alphabetical script17
15016758866Harappa and Mohenjo DaroMajor urban complexes of Harappan civilization; laid out on planned grid pattern18
15016758867AryansIndo-European nomadic, warlike, pastorialists who replaced Harappan civilization19
15016758868Huanghe (Yellow) River BasinSite of the development of sedentary agriculture in China20
15016758869Shang1st Chinese dynasty21
1501675887022
15016758871PaleolithicThe period that ended about 3,000 years after the end of the last Ice Age, it lasted until about 10,000 years ago. (Old Stone Age) The period of the Stone Age associated with the evolution of humans. It predates the Neolithic period.23
15016758872Path of migration for humans during Paleolithic eraFrom Africa to Eurasia, Australia, and the Americas24
15016758873EglitarianBelieving in the equality of all peoples25
15016758874Pastoralists were often the developers and disseminators of of ____ and ___ that transformed warfare in agrarian civilizationsnew weapons modes of transportation26
15016758875_____ developed in this period continued to have strong influences in later periodsNew religious beliefs27
15016758876Mediterranean SeaSea connecting Mesopotamia, Anatolia, and N. Africa28
15016758877PolytheismBelief in more than one god29
15016758878Nile RiverPrincipal water source of water flowing through North Africa (site of sophisticated cultural development); flooded regularly and enriched the soil in the process30
15016758879historythe study of past events and changes in the development, transmission and transformation of cultural practices31
15016758880stone agethe earliest known period of human culture, marked by the creation and use of stone tools and other nonmetallic substances32
15016758881foragersFood collectors who gather, fish, or hunt33
15016758882city-stateA sovereign state comprising a city and its immediate surrounding area34
15016758883Babylonan ancient city of Mesopotamia known for its wealth, luxury, and vice.35
15016758884HammurabiBabylonian king who codified the laws of Sumer and Mesopotamia (died 1750 BCE)36
15016758885scribea person who copies or writes out documents; often a record keeper37
15016758886cuneiformA form of writing developed by the Sumerians (Mesopotamia) using a wedge shaped stylus and clay tablets.38
15016758887bronzeA metal that is a mixture of copper and tin39
15016758888paleolithicstone age period when human used stone tools and survived by hunting and foraging40
15016758889Homo sapienshuman species derived from apes with more brain capacity for intelligence41
15016758890venus figurinespaleolithic female figurines that emphasize physical attributes associated with fecundity42
15016758891cave paintingspaleolithic cave paintings that emphasize hunting--Lascaux France is most famous43
15016758892pastoralismthe process of domestication, raising, and herding of animals44
15016758893specializationpeople in civilizations could be assigned different jobs and statuses in society due to having a surplus of food45
15016758894patriarchythe idea that males have a right to rule and reign over states and families46
15016758895civilizationlarge scale communities that had certain characteristics in common such as: recordkeeping, complex institutions (government, economy, organized religion), cities, specialization of labor, long-distance trade, technology47
15016758896Euphrates and Tigristwo principle Mesopotamian rivers48
15016758897Sumerearliest Mesopotamian city state49
15016758898Babylonsecond oldest Mesopotamian city state, succeeds Sumer, most important king was Hammurabi50
15016758899Hammurabi's Codefirst law code in the world, of Babylonia, dealt with legal contracts and responsibility for wrong doing51
15016758900bronze metallurgyalloy of copper, tin, and zinc, this metal began to be produced from about 2800 BCE improved military equipment, agricultural knives, and plows52
15016758901iron metallurgya changeable metal, less hard than bronze, but more flexible, developed around 1500 BCE by the Hittites53
15016758902wheelround object used to move heavy weights and to create vehicles first in Sumer54
15016758903cuneiforma very early form of writing, from Sumer in Mesopotamia, done by pressing a cone-shaped stylus into soft clay55
15016758904Epic of Gilgameshepic Mesopotamian poem that highlights the stresses of civilization56
15016758905Egypta founding civilization along the Nile in Northeastern Africa57
15016758906HieroglyphicsEgyptian writing (pictographs & symbols representing sounds+ideas)58
15016758907Harrappa & Mohenjo DaroTwo early, very large, and complex Indus Valley city states. Little is known about these but their size and complexities imply central planning.59
15016758908Indus RiverRiver in Northern India on which the first Indian civilizations were built; flooded twice a year in a predictable manner60
15016758909VedasA belief system based on the caste system brought into India by peoples probably from the Caucasus between about 5000 and 4000 BCE61
15016758910VarnaCaste system of India: Brahmin, Khsatriya, Vaishya, Shudra--people could not move out of the caste they were born into62
15016758911Chinaearliest civilization in Asia63
15016758912Huang He and Yangzi Hetwo rivers in China that supported early civilization64
15016758913Shang DynastyThe dominant people in the earliest Chinese dynasty for which we have written records (ca. 1750-1027 B.C.E.). Ancestor worship, divination by means of oracle bones, and the use of bronze vessels for ritual purposes were major elements of this culture.65
15016758914HinduismTerm for a wide variety of beliefs and ritual practices that have developed in the Indian subcontinent since antiquity. It has roots in ancient Vedic, Buddhist, and south Indian religious concepts and practices.66
15016758915ZoroastrianismFounded by Zoroaster; taught that humans had the freedom to choose between right and wrong, and that goodness would triumph in the end. Marked by dualism between God = Good and the Evil. Influenced Christianity. Was one of the first monotheistic religions.67
15016758916JudaismMonotheistic (belief in one god), founded by Abraham, code of law found in the Torah (first 5 books of the Bible), led to the development of two other Abrahamic religions: Christianity and Islam.68
15016758917Mandate of HeavenA political theory of ancient China in which the emperor is given the power to rule by a divine sources. This tie could be severed by ineffectual rule69
15016758918Oracle bonesbones on which the ruling class in China wrote questions and had them divined by the priestly class70
15016758919Mesoamericacultural area in the Americas extending from central America to present-day Peru71
15016758920Olmecthe first major civilization in Mexico72
15016758921MayaMesoamerican civilization in and near the Yucatan Peninsula--had the first and only pre-Columbian writing system in the Americans73
15016758922ChavinMesoamerican civilization in present-day Peru that had highly developed art and architectural practices74
15016758923CarthageCity located in present-day Tunisia, founded by Phoenicians ca. 800 B.C.E. It became a major commercial center and naval power in the western Mediterranean until defeated by Rome in the third century B.C.E. (p. 107)75
15016758924irrigation systemsreplacement or supplementation of rainfall with water from another source in order to grow crops76
15016758925Indus River Valley Civilizationan ancient civilization thriving along the Indus River in what is now Pakistan and western India. This civilization is also sometimes referred to as the Harappan or Harappa-Mohenjodaro Civilization of the Indus Valley, in reference to the excavated cities of Harappa and Mohenjodaro77

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